Relating Onset of Health Conditions to Changes in Tobacco/Nicotine Use — Analyses based on the U.S. PATH Study *

P. N. Lee, J. Fry
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Abstract

1. SUMMARY Introduction Evidence is limited on how the onset of health conditions affects tobacco/nicotine use. We report analyses from adults in the U.S. PATH study relating changes in established cigarette and/or e-cigarette use between Waves 1 and 4 to onset of conditions in Waves 2 or 3. Methods Nine conditions had sufficient onsets for analysis. The main analyses adjusted for sex and age. Additional analyses excluded other tobacco/nicotine product users, controlled for more variables, restricted changes in one product to never users of the other, or restricted attention to changes occurring after onset of the condition. Results In the main analyses, onset of each condition predicted significantly increased overall e-cigarette initiation rates, with highest odds ratios (OR) for any major respiratory condition (2.86, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.10–3.90) and cancer (2.51, 1.52–4.14). Each onset also predicted higher cigarette smoking initiation rates, but ORs were lower than for e-cigarette initiation, and only significant for any cardiovascular condition (1.65, 1.31–2.08), high blood pressure (1.34, 1.13–1.58), and any major smoking-related condition (1.35, 1.12–1.62). For quitting smoking only six conditions showed increased ORs, significant only for high cholesterol (1.29, 1.02–1.62). The additional analyses generally confirmed these patterns. Relationships with re-initiating cigarettes or becoming dual users of cigarettes and e-cigarettes were inconsistent. Onset of conditions also tended to reduce amount smoked by smokers. Conclusions While PATH is nationally representative, its sample size does not always allow precise estimates. There is concern about accuracy of statements by some older participants claiming to be Wave 1 never smokers but Wave 4 ever smokers. Nevertheless the previously unreported association between onset of the health conditions and e-cigarette initiation (which mainly occurs in Wave 1 cigarette smokers) appears real. [Contrib. Tob. Nicotine Res. 32 (2023) 1–10]
健康状况与烟草/尼古丁使用变化的关系——基于美国PATH研究的分析*
1. 关于健康状况如何影响烟草/尼古丁使用的证据有限。我们报告了美国PATH研究中对成年人的分析,这些分析将第1波和第4波之间香烟和/或电子烟使用的变化与第2波或第3波的发病情况联系起来。方法9种条件均有充分的起病条件进行分析。主要分析根据性别和年龄进行了调整。其他分析排除了其他烟草/尼古丁产品使用者,控制了更多变量,将一种产品的变化限制在从不使用另一种产品的情况下,或限制对发病后发生的变化的关注。结果在主要分析中,每种疾病的发作都预示着总体电子烟起始率的显著增加,任何主要呼吸系统疾病(2.86,95%可信区间(CI) 2.10-3.90)和癌症(2.51,1.52-4.14)的比值比(OR)最高。每次发作也预示着更高的卷烟开始率,但ORs低于电子烟开始率,并且仅对任何心血管疾病(1.65,1.31-2.08)、高血压(1.34,1.13-1.58)和任何主要吸烟相关疾病(1.35,1.12-1.62)具有显著性。对于戒烟,只有6种情况的or值增加,只有高胆固醇的or值增加(1.29,1.02-1.62)。额外的分析基本上证实了这些模式。重新开始吸烟或成为香烟和电子烟的双重使用者的关系不一致。疾病的发作也倾向于减少吸烟者的吸烟量。结论:虽然适宜卫生技术方案具有全国代表性,但其样本量并不总是允许精确估计。一些年长的参与者声称自己是第一波从不吸烟,而第四波从不吸烟,这些说法的准确性令人担忧。然而,以前未报道的健康状况与电子烟开始(主要发生在第1波吸烟者中)之间的关联似乎是真实的。(普通发布版。钻头扭矩。尼古丁法规。32 (2023)1-10]
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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